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Dr
École Normale Supérieure
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Schedule
Tuesday, June 16, 2020
2:00 PM Europe/London
Recording provided by the organiser.
Domain
NeuroscienceOriginal Event
View sourceHost
Sussex Visions
Duration
70 minutes
Retinal projections often poorly represent the structure of the physical world: well-defined boundaries within the eye may correspond to irrelevant features of the physical world, while critical features of the physical world may be nearly invisible at the retinal projection. Visual cortex is equipped with specialized mechanisms for sorting these two types of features according to their utility in interpreting the scene, however we know little or nothing about their perceptual computations. I will present novel paradigms for the characterization of these processes in human vision, alongside examples of how the associated empirical results can be combined with targeted models to shape our understanding of the underlying perceptual mechanisms. Although the emerging view is far from complete, it challenges compartmentalized notions of bottom-up/top-down object segmentation, and suggests instead that these two modes are best viewed as an integrated perceptual mechanism.
Peter Neri
Dr
École Normale Supérieure
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